Those Were the Days
School Reunions Most Important When
Memories Fade
By Dave Rasdal of
the Cedar Rapids Gazette
You remember
starting the day by saying the Pledge of Allegiance. You remember
the teacher having a switch or wooden paddle handy if discipline was
necessary. And you remember the pair of outhouses in back.
Country schools,
most notably the one-room schools that dotted the Iowa landscape as
recently as a half-century ago, were places where getting to and
from school was half the fun, where education was often one-on-one,
where the lessons were more than readin’, ‘ritin’, and ’rithmetic.
It’s as Beverly J.
(Sida) Poduska of rural Solon writes: “The legacy of education in
country schools reminds many of us how we learned to care, share,
and respect our family, friends, and others around us.
In 1959, when
Beverly began kindergarten, she was the third generation in her
family to attend Newport No. 3, which is still located along Highway
1 between Solon and Iowa City. {It is no longer there.}
She remembers
wearing new school clothes and seeing long rows of coat hooks, lunch
pails lining a shelf, {and} wooden desks of all sizes. The school
had no running water or electricity. And Newport No. 3 was fairly
unusual because it had a basement that could be used for class
projects and even recess in bad weather.
“There was a
potluck picnic at the end of the school year, and all family members
and friends in the community would attend,” Beverly writes.
Newport No. 3
closed after the 1962-63 school year, relegated to the archives in
the minds of the students.
A month ago, I
asked readers to share their memories of one-room schoolhouses. I’d
run across an old one-room school near Atkins, west of Cedar Rapids,
that is almost certainly destined for change since a new house is
being built on the same property. While the building hasn’t been a
school since 1936 and was subsequently used to store hay and farm
equipment, just it’s presence along the road all these decades
evokes memories. Several recalled that school, Center School No. 5
with fondness.
The memories of
country school are as numerous as the students who recited their
ABCs in one. But my space is limited, so I can relate only some of
the many comments I received.
Lighting the oil
burner on Sunday nights was always the chore of Don Wullner, now of
Cedar Rapids, writes his sister Marlene Wright also of Cedar Rapids.
(She includes their sister, Gerri Jacobsen of Cedar Rapids, in her
letter. The three attended Center School.
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